Mapping leaf area of urban greenery using aerial LiDAR and ground-based measurements in Gothenburg, Sweden

Klingberg J., Konarska J., Lindberg F., Johansson L., Thorsson S., 2017. Mapping leaf area of urban greenery using aerial LiDAR and ground-based measurements in Gothenburg, Sweden. Urban Forestry & Urban Greening 26:31-40

Platform
Gothenburg
Publication type
Scientific article (peer-reviewed)
Projects
Valuation of ecosystem services provided by urban greenery
DOI Title
Mapping leaf area of urban greenery using aerial LiDAR and ground-based measurements in Gothenburg, Sweden
Journal
Urban Forestry & Urban Greening
DOI
10.1016/j.ufug.2017.05.011
Author(s)
Jenny Klingberg Janina Konarska Fredrik Lindberg Lars Johansson Sofia Thorsson
Published year

 

Abstract

Leaf area of urban vegetation is an important ecological characteristic, influencing urban climate through shading and transpiration cooling and air quality through air pollutant deposition. Accurate estimates of leaf area over large areas are fundamental to model such processes. The aim of this study was to explore if an aerial LiDAR dataset acquired to create a high resolution digital terrain  odel could be used to map effective leaf area index (Le) and to assess the Le variation in a high latitude urban area, here represented by the city of Gothenburg, Sweden. Le was estimated from iDAR data using a Beer-Lambert law based approach and compared to ground-based measurements with hemispherical photography and the Plant Canopy Analyser LAI-2200. Even though the LiDAR dataset was not optimized for Le mapping, the comparison with hemispherical photography showed good agreement (r2 = 0.72, RMSE = 0.97) for urban parks and woodlands. Leaf area density of single trees, estimated from LiDAR and LAI-2200, did not show as good agreement (r2 = 0.53, RMSE = 0.49). Le in 10 m resolution covering most of Gothenburg municipality ranged from 0 to 14 (0.3% of the values >7) with an average Le of 3.5 in deciduous forests and 1.2 in urban built-up areas. When Le was averaged over larger scales there was a high correlation with canopy cover (r2 = 0.97 in 1 × 1 km2 scale) implying that at this scale Le is rather homogenous. However, when Le was averaged only over the vegetated parts, differences in Le became clear. Detailed study of Le in seven urban green areas with different amount and type of greenery showed a large variation in Le, ranging from average Le of 0.9 in a residential area to 4.1 in an urban woodland. The use of LiDAR data has the potential to considerably increase information of forest structure in the urban environment.

 

 

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